The Roaring Twenties




  • Emphasizes the period's social, artistic, and cultural dynamism
  • General feeling of discontinuity associated with modernity, a break with traditions
  • New technologies, especially automobiles, movies and radio proliferated 'modernity' to a large part of the population
  • Amusement, fun and lightness were cultivated in jazz and dancing, in defiance of the horrors of World War I, which remained present in people's minds
  • Therefore known as the “Jazz Age”
  • Prohibition was in effect during this time which leads to the formation of gangsters and organized crime

Break down of morals:
  • Before factories, the American family would live and work together on their family farm. This built up many family traditions and strong morals.
  • Factories where built so the family moved into the city and worked long hours. This meant the family was spending more time apart from one another.
  • Soon children were going to school for longer amounts of time. Kids spend more time with their teachers and their peers than their family.
  • The automobile help created distance between families as they live further apart.
  • Being away from family is the breakdown of the family morals.
  • Women began to dress more scantily and began to drink and smoke in their free time. On top of this they began to be more promiscuous, with more open views towards sex

Puritans To Prohibition (During the Roaring 20's)

    1. The Puritans loaded more beer than water onto the Mayflower before they cast off for the New World.
    2. While there wasn't any cranberry sauce, mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, or pumpkin pie to eat at the first Thanksgiving, there was beer, brandy, gin, and wine to drink.
    3. A brewery was one of Harvard College's first construction projects so that a steady supply of beer could be served in the student dining halls.
    4. The early colonialists made alcohol beverages from, among other things, carrots, tomatoes, onions, beets, celery, squash, corn silk, dandelions, and goldenrod.
    5. The manufacture of rum became early Colonial New England's largest and most prosperous industry.
    6. Tavern owners enjoyed higher social status than did the clergy during part of the Colonial period.
    7. A traveler through the Delaware Valley in 1753 compiled a list of the drinks he encountered; all but three of the 48 contained alcohol.
    8. The first Kentucky whiskey was made in 1789 by a Baptist minister.
    9. The distillation of whiskey led to the first test of federal power, the Whiskey Rebellion (1794).
    10. During the Colonial period, alcohol abstainers had to pay one life insurance company rates 10% higher than that of drinkers. Of course, today we know that abstainers tend not to live as long as moderate drinkers.
    11. The laws of most American colonies required towns to license suitable persons to sell wine and spirits and failure to do so could result in a fine.
    12. Colonial taverns were often required to be located near the church or meetinghouse.
    13. George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson all enjoyed brewing or distilling their own alcohol beverages.
    14. The Colonial Army supplied its troops with a daily ration of four ounces of either rum or whiskey.
    15. Abraham Lincoln held a liquor license and operated several taverns.
    16. Religious services and court sessions were often held in the major tavern of Colonial American towns.
    17. In the 1830's the average American aged 15 or older consumed over seven gallons of absolute alcohol (resulting from an average of 9 1/2 gallons of spirits, 1/2 gallon of wine, and 27 gallons of beer), a quantity about three times the current rate.
    18. Thomas Jefferson wrote the first draft of the Declaration of Independence in a tavern in Philadelphia.
    19. Every signer of the American Declaration of Independence drank alcoholic beverages.
    20. The first signer of the Declaration of Independence, John Hancock, was an alcohol dealer.
    21. Before he took his famous ride, Paul Revere is reported to have had two drinks of rum.
    22. The patriot Patrick Henry (“Give me liberty or give me death”) was a bar tender.
    23. President Martin Van Buren was born in his father’s tavern.
    24. Alewives in Colonial America brewed a special high proof "groaning ale" for pregnant women to drink during labor.
    25. "Root beer" was a temperance product developed in the hope that it would replace beer in popularity.......it did not
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